NZ PM Jacinda Ardern preps for return to work

Just days short of one year as Labour Party leader, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has announced her post-maternity leave plans.

The New Zealand PM has posted on Facebook her plans for getting back to work.

The New Zealand PM has posted on Facebook her plans for getting back to work. Source: Facebook @jacindaardern

Announcing her pregnancy soon after becoming New Zealand's Prime Minister, Jacinda Ardern reflected on what had already been a "big year".

Now, with her maternity leave about to end and her first year as Labour leader coming to a close, "big" seems like an understatement.

The NZ PM Jacinda Ardern has posted on Facebook her return to work
Source: Facebook @jacindaardern

Ardern - who turned 38 last week - took to social media over the weekend, in what was just her second public message since leaving hospital with daughter Neve in June, to reveal her post-return parliamentary plans.

Rocking her five-week-old while speaking to the camera, she outlined her juggling act of reading government papers and caring for the baby.

"We're all doing really well and have absolutely no routine to speak of. I can hear a chorus of parents laughing that you would ever have a routine with a five week old baby," Ardern said, before outlining some key policies areas she would be perusing.

In July 2017, Ardern was the deputy of a flailing opposition party in a country of fewer than five million residents, insisting she had no plans to lead.

A week later - almost a year ago to the day - she was handed the reins of the opposition and the phenomenon dubbed "Jacindamania" took off, rocketing her to both domestic political triumph and the world stage.

Having negotiated a government coalition while suffering morning sickness, the former small-town Mormon has gone on to capture headlines across the globe as left-wing political figure, while leading a programme of steady reform at home.

Ardern became just the second female leader in history to give birth while in office.
Ardern became just the second female leader in history to give birth while in office. Source: AAP

That's on top of becoming the first elected world leader to take maternity leave.

While her fill-in, the 73-year-old deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters, has, for the most part, had a settled stint in the hot seat, New Zealand's politics has not been without drama during Ardern's leave of absence.

Nurses have gone on strike, spats with Australian politicians have broken out and the everyday battles of domestic politics have persisted.

Parliament also sits next week, meaning there'll be no steady transition back into political life for Ardern.

"Ultimately though, that first week back, I am going to be focused on getting straight back into it," she said.


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